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Mandan

 
(măn'dăn') pronunciation
n., pl., Mandan, or -dans.
    1. A Native American people formerly living in villages along the Missouri River in south-central North Dakota, with present-day descendants on Lake Sakakawea in west-central North Dakota.
    2. A member of this people.
  1. The Siouan language of the Mandan.

[French Mandane, probably from Dakota mawátaNna.]


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Bull Dance, Mandan O-kee-pa Ceremony, oil painting by George Catlin, …
(click to enlarge)
Bull Dance, Mandan O-kee-pa Ceremony, oil painting by George Catlin, … (credit: Courtesy of the Smithsonian American Art Museum (formerly National Museum of American Art), Washington, D.C.)
North American Plains Indian people living mostly in North Dakota, U.S. The Mandan language is of Siouan stock. According to 19th-century anthropologist Washington Matthews, the Mandan called themselves Numakiki ("people"). The Mandan traditionally lived in dome-shaped, earth-covered lodges clustered in stockaded villages, planted corn (maize), beans, pumpkins, and sunflowers, hunted buffalo, and made pottery and baskets. They held elaborate ceremonies, including the sun dance and the Bear Ceremony, a healing and war-preparation rite. They had age-graded warrior and women's societies as well as shamanistic societies. Nineteenth-century Mandan life was among the most recorded of Plains Indian traditions; tribal members depicted heroic deeds on buffalo robes, and artists George Catlin and Karl Bodmer portrayed Mandan life and people in a number of paintings. By the mid-19th century the tribe, reduced by smallpox, had moved to Fort Berthold for protection from the Sioux; the new settlement became the core of the Fort Berthold Reservation, where they live with the Hidatsa and the Arikara as the Three Affiliated Tribes. Population estimates indicated approximately 1,300 Mandan descendants in the early 21st century.

For more information on Mandan, visit Britannica.com.

Mandan (măn'dăn, -dən), indigenous people of North America whose language belongs to the Siouan branch of the Hokan-Siouan linguistic stock (see Native American languages). The Mandan were a sedentary tribe of the Plains area and were culturally connected with their neighbors on the Missouri River, the Arikara and the Hidatsa. The Mandan had certain distinctive cultural traits, which included a myth of origin in which their ancestors climbed from beneath the earth on the roots of a grapevine. According to tradition, at one time the Mandan lived to the east, but their movements in historic times were westward up the Missouri River. By the mid-18th cent., they lived in nine villages near the mouth of the Heart River in S central North Dakota. After having suffered severely from smallpox and the attacks of the Assiniboin and the Sioux, the Mandan moved farther up the Missouri River to a point opposite the Arikara villages. Here the Mandan survivors merged into two villages on opposite sides of the Knife River. They were visited (1804) by Lewis and Clark, who said that they numbered some 1,250. In 1837, after an epidemic of smallpox and cholera, the Mandan were reduced to some 150, all dwelling in a single village. When the Hidatsa moved (1845) from the Knife River region N to the Fort Berthold trading post, the few Mandan joined them. A large reservation was set aside (1870) for the Mandan, the Hidatsa, and the Arikara in North Dakota (Fort Berthold Reservation). There were some 1,200 Mandan in the United States in 1990.

Bibliography

See G. Catlin, O-Kee-Pa, a Religious Ceremony, and Other Customs of the Mandans (1867, centennial ed. by J. C. Ewers, 1967).


 
 
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American Heritage Dictionary. The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2007, 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2009. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. © 1994-2012 Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2012, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/ Read more

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